Rawlings Family of Maryland


“I don’t know what term properly applies to this type of group. Family doesn’t cover it. Even extended family feels too small. Tribe, however, is too big. I’m inclined to hijack the term clan from anthropology, although even that is not quite right, because the type of group I’m talking about was not a formal entity, had no organization, no name, no recognized chief, and no exact boundaries. It was more like a loose network of extended families tied together by a mutual sense of having descended from a great someone in the past-- or a string of great someones.” -- Tamim Ansary, West of Kabul, East of New York

  & Their Times

Rawlings Family & Friends

17th Century

18th Century

Revolutionary War

Context

Anthony Rawlings I
Anthony Rawlings I -Page 2

Anthony Rawlings I

Anthony Rawlings I -Page 2

Anne Arundel County Roads, 1705-

Moses Rawlings & George Washington

St. Mary’s Manors



Richard Clarke

1649: Act of Religious Tolerance (Painting)

Bowie Collection

Fortifications of new York

Maryland chronology 1620-1699

Dr. William Jones-1678
Dr. William Jones’ Patient/Debtor List

Inhabitants of the South River

Col. Moses Rawlings


Fort Washington


Murder of the Indian King

Aaron Rawlings I 1667-1741
Susanna Jones Rawlings

Justice John Rawlings 1705-1756 of Frederick (now Montgomery) County

View from Fort

Washington

Maryland Historical Chronology 1700-1799

Justice John Rawlings 1705-1756 of Frederick (now Montgomery) County

Dr. William Jones-1678
Dr. William Jones’ Patient/Debtor List

Uncle Stephen Rawlings

Escape from Long Island


George Fox in Scotland

Col. Moses Rawlings

Aaron Rawlings I
1667-1741

Monacacy Quakers

September 1776:
The Jaws of the Empire

Joshua Gee & the Principio Company

Uncle Stephen Rawlings

Ruth Clarke & Uncle Moses Rawlings

St. Mary’s Manors

Aunt Mary Rumney and her family

Who Built Wall Street?

Slavery & Glasgow

Rawlings marriage index



CLAIBORNE

1756 Frederick County Petition

Whiskey Insurrection


The Lost Town of London

Tucker Family

Welsh Family

Steven Rawlings Family


Murder of the Indian King

Richard Clarke

Maryland Constitutional Convention
Moses Rawlings, Delegate

Anne Arundel County Roads, 1705-

The Lost Dead of All Hallows Parish

Aunt Mary Rumney and her family

James Rawlings of Virginia and Maryland

James Rawlings Ironmaster of the Revolution

Geophysical survey of All Hallows graveyard

Aunt Mary Rumney and her family

Nicholas Rawlings (1638-1675) and wife Elizabeth (-1676)

Susanna Jones Rawlings

 

Maryland Constitutional Convention

Moses Rawlings, Delegate

Who was John Bayley of All Hallows Parish?

The Lost Dead of All Hallows Parish

The Lost Dead of All Hallows Parish

Revolution Manuscripts at Duke
(includes Dick-Stewart papers)

William Pinkney’s famous oration: 1788

Darnall family of Charles County

Who was John Bayley of All Hallows Parish?

Who was John Bayley of All Hallows Parish?

Prelude to the Revolution

Former Slave Aunt Eve Interviewed

James Rawlings of Virginia and Maryland

Darnall family of Charles County

Darnall family of Charles County

American Revolution.org
The Battle of Fort Washington

Frederick County

Nicholas Rawlings (1638-1675) and wife Elizabeth (-1676)

Beard Records of 17th Century Va.

Hedges Land in Maryland

Ghost and Spirit Association of Maryland -Frederick Courthouse

Shipwrecks of the Chesapeake

The Lonely Death of Lloyd Rawlings

A Reminiscence Sung
Lane & Clark families

  • The Ohio Company
  • Rediscovering the Braddock Trail
  • Col. Moses Family Documents
    (War Lands Litigation)

    Other States

    >



    “Instead of television, we had genealogy. The leaders, the white-headed ones, spent endless hours with one aother or with us youngsters, tracing connections. So-and-so marrried so-and-so, and then their progeny got worted into thee other branches through marriage, so actually your cousin Saliq is your second cousin through Sweet Daddy-- and so on. It might not sound exciting, but remember that genealogy was the warp and family stories the woof of the fabric that made us one entity.”-- Tamim Ansary. West of Kabul, East of New York.

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